acerbone@adirondackdailyenterprise.com From left, Tupper Lake village Trustee Ron LaScala, Chief of Staff for Sen. Dan Stec Deborah Capezzuti, Lahinch Group Managing Member Joe Gehm and Lahinch Group Member Mike Dunyk walk through the Oval Wood Dish factory on Thursday. Behind them are Tupper Lake village Mayor Paul Maroun and Stec. This portion of the building is currently being used for boat and car storage.
(Enterprise photo â Aaron Cerbone) From left, Tupper Lake Free Press Publisher Dan McClelland, Tupper Lake village Mayor Paul Maroun, Trustee Ron LaScala, Lahinch Group Managing Member Joe Gehm, state Sen. Dan Stec and Lahinch Group Member Mike Dunyk look up at the tall ceilings in the Oval Wood Dish factoryâs Building 3 Thursday. This large building is to be turned into three stories of loft-style apartments by Lahinch Group.
Developer buys hulking OWD factory in center of Tupper Lake northcountrypublicradio.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from northcountrypublicradio.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
acerbone@adirondackdailyenterprise.com
The former Oval Wood Dish factory on Demars Boulevard in Tupper Lake is seen in December 2019.
(Enterprise photo â Aaron Cerbone) TUPPER LAKE The former Oval Wood Dish factory on Demars Boulevard has been sold to a development company that plans to convert the 110,000-square-foot building into mixed-income housing and business. For years the building has sat empty, except for boats and cars people lease space to store inside and at one point a charity gift shop. The sale of the building has been in the works for years but was finalized last Tuesday, April 13. Norman Bobrow, of Manhattan sold the property to Syracuse-based Lahinch Group, according to Tupper Lake village Mayor Paul Maroun.
acerbone@adirondackdailyenterprise.com
The former Oval Wood Dish factory on Demars Boulevard in Tupper Lake is seen in December 2019.
(Enterprise photo â Aaron Cerbone) TUPPER LAKE The former Oval Wood Dish factory on Demars Boulevard has been sold to a development company that plans to convert the 110,000-square-foot building into mixed-income housing and business. For years the building has sat empty, except for boats and cars people lease space to store inside and at one point a charity gift shop. The sale of the building has been in the works for years but was finalized last Tuesday, April 13. Norman Bobrow,of Manhattan sold the property to Syracuse-based Lahinch Group, according to Tupper Lake village Mayor Paul Maroun.
hjriley@roadrunner.com Written in pencil on the back of this photo is the following: âfrom the left â Ptl. Duquette, CH Frank Sheldon, Albert Deshaw, Thomas Somers, Arenil Baril [sp?], Mayor Paul Martin â Village Board. First Macadam Road â Cliff Avenue, 1928, Windsor Hotel on right.â
(Photo and details courtesy of Ben Gocker at the Goff-Nelson Memorial Library, Tupper Lake) This formal picture of Tupper Lake village Mayor Paul Martin was apparently taken when he was town supervisor, since that is how he is identified on the back of the photo.
(Photo and details courtesy of Ben Gocker at the Goff-Nelson Memorial Library, Tupper Lake)